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#46 |
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Yeah, I saw another reginal coop that charges its towns based on their populations. I think the charge based on the size of the collection your librarian sees is based on the way the coop reprocesses the charges and not directly based on how Overdrive charges for everything. I do think Adobe and Overdrive are making a decent amount of money from ebook lending as well.
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#47 | |
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Pretty sure the NSA budget is still off the record even though it is no longer a complete secret. Large parts of the budget are hidden, or at least merged into very large more general categories. In the case of tax funded libraries, I imagine you could get it if you pressed hard enough (FOIA or some such maybe). |
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#48 | |
Banned
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Financial records of all publicly funded institutions are open to anyone who asks for them. And remember we are dealing with city, county or maybe even state institutions, not federal. And there would be no valid reason to deny the information. Not sure it's worth the hassle but if really interested all I would need to do is ask a buddy of mine's wife who was our mayor for about 10-12 yrs. Our last mayor I knew dropped deal a couple years ago out of the blue so he would be more difficult to ask. And I grew up with the kids of half the city counsel so it's not like it would be too hard to ask and get the details. It's one nice thing about small towns. We all know each other...hahahaha...but this sort of thing is not some sort of national security matter fer goodness sakes! And we are entitled to know how the funds are spent. I think we all just want to know how it works more than anything else. I still think what needs done is to reinvent the whole library. Still keep the research aspect of it, but also open part of it into a more social environment where people can get together, maybe have some sort of small business coffer bar sort of thing (no Starbucks or what not, just a small town mom 'n pop sort of thing). A solid kids section is a must and regular reader clubs/groups. But that all takes money and, well, that's very difficult to obtain from cities these days, especially for something I am certain well over 50% of people have never used and really don't understand. But I sense it's time for the library to evolve, at least on the small town level. |
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#49 | |||||
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From imdb Quote:
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#50 | |
Is that a sandwich?
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And yet Macmillan and Simon & Schuster arent happy with the Overdrive system. They want more money. I believe Macmillan wanted to receive a fee per borrow which libraries oppose. Libraries are good customers. With 17,000+ public libraries in the US an author can do reasonably well if each one purchased their hardcover. Add in all the education and corporate libraries plus e-books and you have significant sales. Also, add international sales to the total. |
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#51 |
Interested Bystander
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From the details of the US system which have been described so far, I'm not surprised, I wouldn't be happy either.
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#52 | |
Grand Master of Flowers
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So it's more of a subsidy for the national literature, and not really a method of reimbursing authors. |
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#53 | |
Tempus fugit.
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I've skimmed over most of this thread but one point jumped out that I wanted to respond to.
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When I log in to Amazon.com, I see that book at $9.99. I have enough reading to do that I'll wait a month or three for my number to come up at the library. If I saw Amazon selling it for, say, $1.99, I'd buy it, no hesitation. Publishers are likely causing the relatively high prices on ebooks and if they don't don't take a lesson from the music industry, they will become irrelevant. They can either have a little bit of something or a whole lot of nothing for all of me. |
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#54 | ||
Grand Master of Flowers
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I don't think that the prices you've quoted are out of line, either. Most albums from iTunes cost $9.99; that seems a pretty reasonable price for a popular novel in e-book form (which is probably why Amazon picked that price originally). While I'm sure that they would sell even more copies at $1.99, I don't particularly see why the cost of two singles from iTunes should be the right price for a popular novel. |
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#55 |
monkey on the fringe
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Wow; move to my library district. Of the three libraries I primarily do business with, one has 25 on the waiting list, another has 20 on the list, and the third one has nobody on the list.
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#56 | |
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If you are in the waiting queue for the pbook, you need to wait for the notification that it is available, then go to the library to pick it up. A few clicks will retrieve the ebook from the library, once the notification e-mail arrives. |
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#57 | |
Man Who Stares at Books
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Now that we gotten several pages deep into this thread, is there someone who can reliably answer a few questions that have been alluded to earlier? 1. What does a library pay to Overdrive for the initial cost and recurring lending cost of an ebook? 2. At what point does the net cost exceed the cost of a pbook of the same title? Would a library stop lending after this cost has been exceeded? 3. Some have hinted that the annual recurring cost of an ebook is capped. But if an ebook is borrowed by 12 patrons a year vs. 50 patrons a year, then is this really true? What if there is a hidden gatekeeper that restricts the number of times a book is borrowed to, say, 26 lending periods a year? I realize that there are bean counters out there who can tell me the cost of a librarian checking out a pbook, and re-shelving it. But that librarian is usually an overhead cost, and unless it can be demonstrated that he/she can be eliminated from the payroll, the cost savings are nil. Ah, but what if the city or state decided to eliminate an entire physical library and go all-electronic, doing away with employees, electricity, heating and maintenance bills? Hmm. |
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#58 | |
eBook Enthusiast
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#59 | |
Tempus fugit.
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Libraries that have multiple "copies" (licences) for a ebook. My library has a dozen+ copies of each of the Stieg Larsson books so a month or three is a reasonable estimate of wait time. At $4 and change, yes, I'd call that reasonable. Last edited by cjottawa; 11-04-2010 at 04:56 PM. |
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#60 |
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For what it's worth, I don't really see ebooks as nearly as big a threat to libraries as the oncoming "Age of Austerity." If government funding was not as big an issue as it is now, libraries would have a much easier time handling the transition to a digital era.
At any rate, copyright and libraries are clearly not in conflict, as demonstrated by the existing services. The same goes for paid rental services, which would have the exact same legal standing as, say, renting a DVD or a video game. As to Overdrive: When a library uses Overdrive, the library is NOT licensing or purchasing books. What they're doing, basically, is paying to be a front-end for the national Overdrive service. Overdrive will set up and customize a website for the local library, including checkout durations and book selections. Overdrive then apparently bills the local library for what local patrons use. I don't know how the "waiting list" works, but I'd presume the library can modify how many copies of a specific book they can loan. Overdrive may also set its own limits. It may be possible for Overdrive at some point to offer some kind of "national rental service" direct to the public, though I assume this depends on the arrangements they have with the publishers. However, I don't think that some type of "Federal Digital Library" as a non-profit makes a lot of sense, especially since it disrupts the local character and involvement of public libraries (and since almost no one will agree to pay for it ![]() |
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